This Casio G-Shock will set you back nearly five figures

in for a shock

Boasting a cult popularity that many luxury timepiece brands would envy, Casio had been hinting that it wanted in on the haute horlogerie pie. New G-Shock MR-G and MT-G watches debuted in the 2013 and 2014 with four-figure price tags that were valuations previously unheard of for the G-Shock range, which had risen in reputation as an affordable and ‘life-proof’ streetwear accessory. The high-volume sales of entry level G-Shocks translated to decent turnover for its newly created high-end tier. Mechanical watch snobs, however, were only partially convinced by Casio’s leap into luxury.

The Japanese superpower of quartz and digital watchmaking truly garnered the attention of serious watch connoisseurs when it teased a version of the G-Shock MR-G that would be handmade using an ancient Japanese metalwork technique. This week, Casio unveiled its most expensive G-Shock to date – the MRG-G1000HT – which employs a samurai ironsmith technique called Tsuiki-doki, one that has been conferred the title of one of Japan’s Important Cultural Properties, similar to UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage designation.

Casio G-Shock’s MRG-G1000HT

The bezel has been hammered using the tsuiki-dokimethod

A mini-plate to mark the collection’s 20th anniversary

Shibuya-based Casio concisely celebrates two decades of its MR-G series with a watch that includes all of Casio’s most prominent horological innovations to date. Besides solar charging, world time comprising the time in 27 cities and 40 timezones, countdown timer and alarm functions, this new G-Shock’s time is also constantly regulated by satellites and radio stations – a technology that Casio and Seiko have been racing to perfect and further for the past decade.

G-Shock now has all the elements of a luxury label: A small limited-edition run of only 300 MRG-G1000HT models worldwide, cutting-edge technology, a trusted brand name, sophisticated visages, precious materials and arduous handcrafting. In collaboration with third-generation artisan Bihou Asano, these timepieces are encircled by labours of love.

The bezel and select centre band links of each piece undergoes tsuiki-doki, ensuring that no two bezels are identical. Traditional colour finishes like Oboro-gin (silver-grey) and Akagane (copper) that are applied to the armour of Japanese warriors, are also applied to the MRG-G1000HT.

Bihou Asano hammers each bezel and select centre links by hand

After hammering, the bezel is coated with a traditional colour finish, such as Akagane

The status symbol of schoolyards now looks to become the status symbol of the same kids, who are now fashion-forward and all grown up. An unostentatious and shock-proof watch that enjoyed unexpected success and whose ‘G’ stands for ‘gravity’, the G-Shock has arguably completed its groundbreaking penetration of the luxury market successfully, which has the ailing Swiss watch industry understandably shaken.